Easier or More Easy?

Until recently, I would probably have told you that easier is the only correct version. Now though, I’m not sure it’s quite so simple. Continue reading

A Word for All Seasons

While reading a recipe recently, I paused for a moment and thought about the cooking term seasoning.  How is it, I wondered that to season can be a verb, and how is it related to the four seasons of the year? Continue reading

Creepypasta

What type of pasta!?

Creepypasta!

If you’re relatively internet savvy, you might currently be nodding and stroking your chin wisely, saying, Ah yes, creepypasta!

The rest of you though, might well be asking yourselves, well, What type of pasta!? Continue reading

What’s the Difference Between a Language and a Dialect?

You might have noticed yesterday that when I mentioned the word bairn, I referred to its use in both Scots and Scottish English. And you might have asked yourself: what’s the difference?

I’m not an expert, and not going to go into all the details, but suffice it to say that they’re quite distinct. Continue reading

Come and See. Or Watch…

A common question that comes up in the English-language classroom is, what’s the difference between seeing and looking? And sometimes watching is thrown in there for good measure.

Explaining them is pretty straightforward. Continue reading

Infectious Laughter

I might not write that expression many more times in my life. I might actually have never written it before to be honest, but I’m probably less likely to use it from now on.

Just as I might not mention that yawning, for example, is contagious very often. And that would of course be due to the current coronavirus pandemic. Continue reading

Lazaretto

Not a word you come across every day, this one.

If you’re understandably unfamiliar with it, it’s a term for a building reserved for the quarantine of lepers or poor people with other diseases. I was reminded of it while writing earlier about the word quarantine and its Venetian origins. Continue reading